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Chicago's own Jessie Mueller, who won the Tony Award for best actress in a musical last year for playing the title role in Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, has been named actress of the year by the Sarah Siddons Society.
Mueller will receive the award—given regularly since 1952, inspired by the fictional Sarah Siddons Award in the film All About Eve—at an April 27 event at Marriott Theatre in Lincolnshire. Also appearing will be Tony Award winners and previous Sarah Siddons honorees Heather Headley and Deanna Dunagan, as well as Mueller's entire acting family: her parents, Roger Mueller and Jill Shellabarger, and her siblings Abby, Matthew and Andrew. All four Mueller siblings are expected to perform, as is Headley.
Proceeds from the event benefit the Sarah Siddons Society's scholarship fund for theater students at Columbia College Chicago, DePaul University, Northwestern University and Roosevelt University. Tickets ($95, students $25) are on sale at beautiful.brownpapertickets.com.

Pivot Arts will return to the Uptown and Edgewater neighborhoods this spring with its third annual festival of theater, dance, children's performances and more programming across multiple venues.
This year's Pivot Arts Festival, set to run May 28–June 7, currently has confirmed performances and other events by BAATHHAUS, Lizi Breit, Bri-Ko, Pamela Chermansky, Edgewater Workbench, Dean Evans, Ayako Kato, Daniel Kerr-Hobert, Lucky Plush Productions, Jessie Marasa, Neo-Futurists, RE Dance, Tsukasa Taiko and Vanessa Valliere. Also on tap are kids' performances by CircEsteem, Lifeline Theatre, Merry Music Makers, Swift School and Storytown Improv.
Confirmed venues for the fest, with tickets ranging from free to $20, include Francesca's Bryn Mawr, Lickity Split Custard and Sweet Shop, Loyola University’s Mundelein Center for the Arts, Granville Avenue, Loyola University’s St. Ignatius Community Plaza and the Uptown Underground. A complete lineup and schedule will be announced shortly, with tickets on sale April 7.

There may be hope yet for a sunny conclusion to our winter of discontent. According to Farmer's Almanac, an annual weather periodical published every year since 1818, if we can make it to April, Chicago will be in store for a summer that is "hotter than normal." This is welcome news coming out of a month that tied for the coldest February since 1875.
Unfortunately, if the Almanac is to be believed, we first have to survive a March that will be five degrees below average. Although, for what it's worth, the Almanac predicted a "slightly milder than normal" winter in 2014, which of course was a little off the mark. In any case, you've made it this far, Chicago. Before you know it, the only dibs you'll need to worry about are the ice cream kind.

For the first time in 50 years, the NFL will host its draft outside of New York. From April 30–May 1, each of the league's 32 teams will head to Chicago to select their next class of concussion patients.
ESPN's Darren Rovell spoke with Peter O'Reilly, the NFL's senior vice president of events, and reported on the plans for the weekend.
Here's what he discovered:
The Auditorium Theatre will be the primary host: ESPN and NFL Network will both have sets inside the theater, and about 3,000 seats will be made available for fans. Outside, there will be another 3,000 seats in an area called "Selection Square." There is not yet an established plan for how those tickets will be distributed, but they will be free.
Grant Park will turn into a meathead bonanza: Chicago's front lawn will become "Draft-Town" over the weekend, with a "small chalet" for each of the league's 32 teams. Here, attendees will be able to run a 40-yard dash and get autographs from players. ESPN and NFL Network will also have sets in the park, which is sure to lure hundreds of sign-bearing fans desperately trying to be on TV for a few seconds. After doing their required interviews with each network inside the theater, each draftee will come outside for an interview for the crowd in the park.
Buckingham Fountain will be lit up in the colors of the team on the clock: It's going to blasphemous to see Chicago's most famous fountain glowing with Packers colors, but it's good to know Buckingham's lights can glow wi

Chicago's melting pot gives way to a spectrum of diverse neighborhoods. Even better, CTA riders can benefit from two 25-cent transfers for up to two hours after their initial swipe. To help you spend your quarter and your time wisely, we suggest taking a walking tour from a station. We start in Pilsen, exploring 18th Street in an hour (or so).
Take the Pink Line to the 18th Street station, which is about a 15-minute ride from the Loop, and head east.
Take Me Out (8 minutes for carryout) This place stands out for actually having Korean "hotties" instead of Mexican fare. These lollipop style wings—or boneless if you prefer—are covered in amazing sauces. Delicious, especially with the purple taro root rice. Get it to go. 1502 W 18th St.
Pilsen Vintage & Thrift (8 minutes for browsing) Just across the street from Knee Deep Vintage, another excellent vintage and thrift store, this shop offers newer designer finds. Each shop offers reasonable prices and a wide selection of housewares, jewelry and more. Take a quick look at the merchandise and continue east. 1430 W 18th St.
Birrieria Reyes de Octolan (20 minutes for a sit-down meal) Try it, you'll like it. Get the goat stew (or birria), which comes with homemade salsas, chilis, onions, tomatoes, cheese, cilantro, lime and hot sauce. A pound of meat is easily shared among 3 people. Don't forget the horchata. 1322 W 18th St.Modern Cooperative (8 minutes browsing) Head east for another four blocks for one of Pilsen's best gems. Th

As Time Out Chicago marks its tenth anniversary, I thought paging through our earliest issues might give me a sense of the kind of slang we were tossing around a decade ago. And yet nothing lept off the page; what if, I wondered, there were words that were new to us then have become so common as to be unremarkable? With that in mind, I consulted dictionaries, pop charts and Hollywood box-office rankings to recall how we talked in 2005.
In one serious sign of the times, blog and podcast both came into their own with the general public around the time we launched as a print magazine (whoops!). Merriam-Webster named blog the word of the year at the end of 2004, while podcast took top honors from the New Oxford American Dictionary for 2005. To have time to read all those blogs and listen to all those podcasts, we all started looking for productivity-boosting life hacks.
Sudoku entered the English lexicon and took over our commutes in 2005. The enduring idea of red states and blue states was still fresh, a meme born of the 2004 presidential election.
The Colbert Report’s 2005 debut was, in its way, also a product of George W. Bush’s winning a second term, and introduced the doctrine of truthiness to the world. Metrosexual was coined a decade earlier but was at the height of its ubiquity in the mid-aughts, with Queer Eye for the Straight Guy in its second season. Tina Fey and Lindsay Lohan had made mean girls happen, even if fetch didn’t. Gwen Stefani made hollaback girl a thing

Broadway in Chicago today announced its full 2015–16 subscription season, to include the previously announced tour launch of Tony winner A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder, a pre-Broadway tryout of the musical Gotta Dance, and new tours of Cabaret, If/Then and Matilda the Musical.
Gotta Dance, the precious-sounding based-on-a-true-story of the NBA's first senior-citizen hip-hop dance crew, features a book by Bob Martin (The Drowsy Chaperone) and Chad Beguelin (Aladdin), music by the late EGOT winner Marvin Hamlisch (A Chorus Line) and Tony nominee Matthew Sklar (The Wedding Singer), and lyrics by Nell Benjamin (Legally Blonde), with direction and choreography by Kinky Boots helmer Jerry Mitchell. It's set to play the Bank of America Theatre December 13–January 17.
Gentleman's Guide will play the Bank of America Theatre September 29–October 11. The same venue will be host to the return of Cabaret, hitting the road again with Roundabout Theatre Company's recent remount of Sam Mendes's 1998 production.
If/Then, last season's new Broadway tuner from the Next to Normal team of Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey, will play the Cadillac Palace Theatre February 23–March 6. Matilda the Musical, the kid-friendly British import based on Roald Dahl's characters, will run March 22–April 10 at the Oriental Theatre.
The subscription slate, which goes on sale Sunday, March 8, kicks off with a return engagement of the stage adaptation of Dirty Dancing, August 18–30 at the Cadillac Palace. Next

Kanye was already dominating the Web, 50 Cent took us to the candy shop and Tom Cruise lost it. Though it certainly will be forever immortalized as the year of Time Out Chicago's launch, there were plenty of other great things going on in 2005. To celebrate our 10th anniversary today, we're taking a look back at the best of everything in 2005.
RECOMMENDED: More on Time Out Chicago's 10-year anniversary
On TVComedy was reborn in 2005 with the near decade–long legend that was The Colbert Report launching alongside The Office, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia and How I Met Your Mother. Though only one is still with us, their legacy lives on inside us ...that's what she said.
In musicIn Destiny's Child's farewell year, Mariah Carey took center stage with her best-selling album, The Emancipation of Mimi, slaying pop powerhouses like Gwen Stefani, Ciara, Kelly Clarkson and the Black Eyed Peas for the top spot.
Sufjan Stevens touring his 2005 album, IllinoisJoe Lencioni/Wikimedia commons
Chicago was wrapped in the ever-loving embrace of Sufjan Steven's tender little voice that hurts so good, debuting his top-rated album of the year, Illinois.
In the moviesThe six-year-long slog that was the Star Wars prequel trilogy ended, and though we're not sure if that's a good thing or a bad thing, it left us all cautious for the sequels slated for release later this year.
Also in '05, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion th

Time Out Chicago turns ten years old this week, which has us feeling nostalgic. So much has changed over the last decade, as we grew from YouTube-less, iPhone-less, Twitter-less, Facebook-less people into smartphone addicts constantly checking our social media feeds. Jay Cutler was college bro, Derrick Rose had working knees, the Blackhawks were not on television and nobody knew who Justin Bieber was. What a time. But as much as we have gained since 2005, we have also lost a great deal. Here is an Oscars-esque montage of those Chicago things we miss the most.
RECOMMENDED: More on Time Out Chicago's 10-year anniversary

Thanks to people like Neil deGrasse Tyson, science has never been cooler, making it a great time for the debut of Bucktown's The Laboratory, a learning space where kids can take classes on fun topics like how to make a robotic monster.
Ed and Amy Kang, both National Board Certified Chicago Public School teachers, have taken their individual strengths (him a Ph.D. in neuroscience and a science teacher, her a focus on the language arts) and developed fun and creative classes based on the principles of STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math) and many of the standards expected in schools.
The result are courses like "Frozen: Welcome to Arendelle," where kids will do experiments that connect to the beloved movie Frozen, and "Spa Chemist," where kids can learn about fragrances and make their own bath bombs. Most classes will run as a series but there may be individual drop-in classes based on interest. Classes will start on March 7.
The space itself is bright and open with chalkboard and dry-erase walls where doodling is encouraged and high top butcher block tables that encourage teamwork. Kids even get to wear tiny lab coats and see things like a 3D printer in action.
Because the Kangs are still teaching, classes for kids will be weekends only and during CPS school breaks (check out their Hogwarts spring break camp!). Most classes are geared toward elementary school age, but they plan to add toddler classes as they see a desire in the neighborhood.
Don't worr